User:MontroseGuy/Joseph Trumbull Article workspace

Joseph Trumbull (December 7, 1782 – August 4, 1861) was a U.S. lawyer, banker, and politician from Connecticut. He represented Connecticut in the U.S. Congress and served as the 20th Governor of Connecticut.

Family
Joseph was born to David Trumbull and his wife nee Sarah Backus in Lebanon, Connecticut. He lived in the family home known as Redwood, on the Lebanon green. David and Sarah had five children. Joseph's siblings were: Joseph first married Harriet Champion (1789-1823) in 1818, daughter of General Henry Champion and nee Abigail Tinker. This marriage produced one child, Henry Champion Trumbull (1821-1855). Harriet died in 1823 and Joseph married Eliza Storrs (1784-1861) on December 1st of the following year. His second marriage also produced one child, Eliza Storrs Trumbull (1826-1862).
 * Sarah Trumbull (1779-1839), who married William Trumbull Williams (1779-1839), her cousin
 * Abigail Trumbull (1781-1861), who married Peter Lanman (1771-1854)
 * John Trumbull (1784-1859), who married Anne Gibbons (1789-1823), Hanna Wallace Tunis (1800-1823) and Eliza Bruen (1793-1857)
 * Jonathan G. W. Trumbull (about 1790-1853), who married Jane Eliza Lathrop (1795-1843)

He died as a result of typhoid fever on August 4, 1861. Two days later, his second wife Eliza died. Amazingly, within a year of his death ten of his close relatives died, including his sister Abigail, his wife Eliza, his brother-in-law William L. Storrs, Joseph and Eliza's daughter Eliza, their son-in-law Lucius Robinson and Lucius' father David Robinson. Joseph and his two wives are buried in the Old North Cemetery, Hartford, Connecticut.

Early Life
He entered Yale in 1797 and graduated in 1801. He immediately studied law with his cousin, William Trumbull Williams. In 1802 he moved to the Western Reserve (now Trumbull County, Ohio) and was admitted to the Ohio bar. Shortly thereafter he moved back to Hartford. He was admitted to the Connecticut bar in 1803 and established his practice at Hartford. In 1828 he became the president of the Hartford Bank and held that office until he resigned in 1839. He was also president of the Providence, Hartford & Fishkill Railroad Co.

In 1849 he received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Yale, his alma mater.

Political career
Joseph Trumbull was born into an influential and politically active family. His grandfather, Jonathan Trumbull, was a colonial Connecticut governor and was the first governor of the State of Connecticut, serving a total of fourteen terms (one year terms). His uncle, Jonathan Jr. also served as governor for ten terms. Another uncle, John Trumbull, served as a personal aide to George Washington during the Revolutionary War and later became a famous painter. Several of his paintings are hanging in the Capitol Rotunda in Washington, D.C. His aunt Mary Trumbull married William Williams, a political activist and signer of the Declaration of Independence.

He also married into powerful families. His first wife, Harriet Champion, was the daughter of Henry Champion, a general in the Revolutioinary War. His second wife was the sister of William L. Storrs, a U.S. Congressman and later the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Connecticut.

Trumbull began his political career with his election to the state's House of Representatives in 1832. He was sent to the U.S. Congress in December 1834 to complete the term of William W. Ellsworth who had resigned, and was elected as a Whig to the Twenty-sixth and Twenty-seventh Congresses (March 4, 1839-March 3, 1843). Trumbull served as governor of Connecticut in 1849 and 1850.